Ulifjeh% 4B Bk iiwn * zl F ahhv \ ag4 YIn gar page - m u - w October 17,19 Catherine Wheel spin into the Michigan By Use Harwin Daily Arts Writer Think, for a moment, of bands that are named after torture devices. Your first thought, after having watched Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure, is naturally of Iron Maiden. After some more ponder- ing, however, you may or may not realize that the Catherine Wheel is also a medi- eval torture device. And, with some more time, you might even realize that the lead vocalist of Catherine Wheel, Rob Dickinson, just happens to also be the cousinofaformermemberofIron Maiden. Will the coincidences never cease? Actually, they probably will. While the band Catherine Wheel will certainly admit to having a dark and haunting sound, accordingtobassist Dave Hawes, "We didn't actually know at the time that it was a torture device. In England, the Catherine Wheel is better known as a firework. We found out about the torture device at a later date. It's prob- ably more apt though." Consisting of Dickinson, Hawes, guitarist Brian Futter, and drummer Neil Sims, Catherine Wheel formed in the seaside town of Yarmouth, England in 1990. "Rob and Brian used to be in loads of bands together. Rob got fed up being a drummer and took up guitar. Then, they knew Neil and asked if he wanted to be a drummer. They adver- tised for a bassist. I answered the ad and we all rehearsed together a few times and we got along," said Hawes. And do they still get along five years later? "Yes, we're friends. We don't spend time together when we're not on the road or in the recording studio, but CATHERINE WHEEL Where: Michigan Theater When Doors open at 7:30 p.m. Tickets: $15 - $20 in advance at Schoolkids' Records Call 810-645-6666 for more information that's good because I couldn't bear be- ing in a band where we all live in each others' pockets," Hawes commented. With Catherine Wheel's newest al- bum, "Happy Days," the band has gar- nered much praise, as well as many comparisons to early Pink Floyd. "Me, not so much, although I love Dark Side of the Moon. The other three guys own five or six Pink Floyd albums in their collections," admittedthe bassist. "But, it has to be said that we have a great amount of respect for Pink Floyd." As far as other influences go, according to Hawes, there were too many to name. "I grew up with the punk stuff in the late '70s. Thirteen, rebelling, having green hair. The four of us, we all love stuff with a good vibe, whether it's punky stuff or dance or whatever. Tthere's always a fight on the bus over who gets to put what in the CD player." Catherine Wheel has recorded an al- bum that has a distinctly different sound than anything they have ever done. While "Ferment" had lavish guitar bal- lads like "Black Metallic," "Happy Days" is jam packed with meaningful lyrics. "It's just a fact of growing up, I guess. Like a cheese, you mature," Hawes laughed. "Lyrically, we'remuch better now. Rob's really matured in his lyric writing and he's more constant with what he writes about." Does this mean that they're happy with the way that "Happy Days" turned out, despite its differences? To this, the bassist re- sponded, "Absolutely. If we weren't happy with it, it wouldn't be out!" But, the production of an album wouldn't be complete without, obvi- ously, time spent in recording and mix- ing studios. "The recording took longer than we had anticipated. Wehadplanned on about six weeks, which was what 'Ferment' and 'Chrome' had taken," said Hawes. "We recorded in a place called Ridge Farm in a sleepy part of England, so it was only us there." But, Catherine Wheel, like most otherbands, still managed to rub elbows with the rich and famous. "We mixed the album in L.A. and it was mixed by a guy named Clif Norrell who did REM's 'Automatic for the People,'"'the bassist mentioned. "Michael Stipe and Rob went out a couple of times and Rob got to play him some rough mixes [of Catherine Wheel] in the car." As mentioned before, Catherine Wheel has a melancholy sound. This being the case, one might wonder why the name "Happy Days" was chosen. "It's a bit ironic, I guess. It's the British irony, sarcasm, humorthatwe all have," Hawes observed. "I guess we're ques- tioning whether they really are happy days. Was your childhood really happy?" Perhaps the subtitle, "The Dark Ride" is more appropriate, with this phrase being a metaphor for the pas- sage of youth. As Dave Hawes re- marked, these themes are repeated in the album's artwork, designedby Storm Thorgerson, who also "did a lot of Pink Floyd covers." Another Pink Floyd as- sociation? "There is a definite connec- tion between us," said Hawes. There has been a definite upsurge in the last year in the popularity of British pop bands. "The popularity of [bands like Oasis and Blur] is im- mense, so we're happy for them." Hawes added quickly, "But, we've never seen ourselves as part of that bandwagon." When Catherine Wheel comes to the Michigan Theater tonight, they'll be appearing with bothJewel and Belly. Tanya Donelly [the lead vocal- ist for Belly] sings on "Judy Staring at the Sun," off of "Happy Days." "'Judy Staring at the Sun' was writ- ten and recorded when we recorded 'Chrome.' Tanya didn't add the vo- cals until about nine months ago just before we finished with 'Happy Days.' It wasn't written with a female vocal- ist in mind, but Gil [the producer]came up with the idea of having a female singer and it just seemed so obvious that the lyrics would come across bet- ter," Hawes stated. But how did they choose Tanya Donelly? "Gil had produced Belly's first album, so he knew Tanya. We had also performed at a couple of festivals in England with them. She did her vocals in about five hours ... and now we're on tour with them! It's great!" What will the band members be doing in their spare time? According to bassist Hawes, he'll be watching I Catherine Wheel are on their "Way Down" to the Michigan to play with Belly. The Simpsons. That is, Homer Simpson, not O.J. While Catherine Wheel may have written a song entitled "Waydown," don't expect them to be throwing in the towel any time soon. Withthereleas "Happy Days," it's clear that they'r band on the way up, and if theylavo already arrived, they'll be arriving v# soon. L-- ade'is no emerald By Michael Zilberman Daily Arts Writer "Jade" is about a woman psychia- trist (Linda Fiorentino) who is married to a high-powered attorney (Chazz Palminteri) and moonlights as an elite prostitute. When one of her clients dies a gruesome death, the detective who takes on the case (David Caruso) just happens tobe the attorney's best friend - as well as the woman's ex-lover. This is a masterpiece ofpainful con- trivance that spends its screen life chas- ing its own tail and promptly deterio- rates in the last reel. It is also an absolutely brilliant piece of filmmaking, complete with great camerawork, solid stunts, qualified cast and respectable art direction. This movie's soul is as divided as its female protagonist's. The first "Jade" comes courtesy of Hollywood hack par excellence Joe Eszterhas (the writer behind "Basic Instinct" and "Showgirls"). The second belongs to the director, William Friedkin ("The French Connection"). In fact, the entire movie could be viewed in terms of the epic struggle between a good director and lousy material. Eszterhas, who lately gets paid millions for 25-word "pitches" literally scribbled on hotel napkins, gets more and more lackadaisical with each new project. "Basic Instinct" at least had a tightly-wound plot to its credit; "Jade," from its premise-that suggests "Belle De Jour" as rewritten by Ed Wood - to its cumbersome climax, is a rewrite of a lazy rewrite. Jade "W' Directed by William Friedkin; with David Caruso and Linda Fiorentino At Showcase t I Also, Eszterhas is mortally afraid of women. Femalesin his scripts are never more than a step away from an ice pick or, in Jade's case, a hatchet; they kill mainly between orgasms, for a change ofpace. Eszterhas is visibly more com- fortable when women short-circuit their basic instincts on themselves (there's an obligatory lesbian subplot in every script). Friedkin, on the other hand, is an honest professional who hasn't had much luck with scripts lately. Always happier with action logistics than plot intricacies, he seems perennially com- pelled to beat himself at his own game and outdo the scene he's most famous for - the car chase sequence in "The French Connection." And believe it or not, in "Jade" he finally does. How? Simply and inge- niously: By slowing the chase down to about 3 miles per hour and making the characters drive their way through fes- tive Chinatown crowds. The nemeses, ten feet from each other, slowly creep forward to the accompaniment ofcrush- ing bones, and the resulting intensity of the scene is nerve-racking. You emerge from it gasping for air. "HI, Unda, I'm hauz. Loved ya' In "Last Seduction," baby. That fence scene, ooh." In the quieter sequences, Friedkin also does what he can to muffle Eszterhas's smug misogyny: In a bed- room scene between sleazy Chazz and bored Linda, he focuses entirely on her face, registering every light ripple of quiet disgust as the husband grunts away off screen. Fiorentino, who is on the brink of being eternally typecast as a femme fatale if she doesn't drop her current schtick very soon,still manages to walk her way through the movie with digni- fiedrestraint. David Caruso, whose char- acter is named David Corelli (what is this, a sitcom?), is a very peculiar non- star. He refreshingly lacks all the little traits making up what is erroneously defined as screen presence: No trade- mark smirks. no natented gestures. And while he was infinitely more spectacu- lar in Barbet Schroeder's "Kiss Of Death," his subdued efficiency here comes through even clearer. As for Chazz Palminteri, he apparently be- longs to the exclusive club of thespians born to play obnoxious lawyers (other notable members include Stanley Tucci and Peter Gallagher). In the end, however, even the joint efforts of Friedkin, his brilliant cinema- tographer Bartkowiak ("Speed") and his cast can't provide a proper counter- balance to Eszterhas's self-destructing script. The coda, very hastily and unconvincingly executed, creates an impression of an author genuinely ap- palled by what he had to deal with. In Friedkin's case, however, it seems oddly commendable. Samir Hamadeh and Mark Oldman "The Internship Bible: 1996 Edition" The Princeton Review, Random House This summer you won't have any excuse for laying on the couch all day, moaning about the lack of opportuni- ties in your field, and you have Mark Oldman and Samir Hamadeh to thank for it. They are two Stanford grads, who after four years of hunting for their own internships, have made the job search easier for the rest of us. The Princeton Review now offers job hunters every- where the results of their long and de- liberate research: "The Internship Bible." "The Internship Bible" is, well, huge. It offers a listing of over 100,000 in- terning opportunities in over 100 fields. It offers internship possibilities all across the country, as well as some 400 foreign countries. It is jammed with informative and well-researched pro- files of available opportunities, and bluntly tells you if you will be right in the rat race or fetching coffee for the boss. "The Internship Bible," weighted with this plethora of information is a wise investment for any college stu- dent. In all fields, employers simply do not look at high GPA's and extracur- ricular activities as the hiring criteria these days. They want some"real world" experience, and unless you join the wacky cast of MTV's increasingly idi- otic TV show, the best way to get into the "real world" is through interning. "The Internship Bible" makes the job hunt a bit easier. Coupled with Oldman and Hamadeh's "Top 100 Internships" (1996 edition, The Princeton Review), "The Internship Bible" saves you what could potentially be weeks and months ot fruitless research. Oldman a Hamadeh, who now hold interns seminars across the country,are cle and justifiably the gurus of the inte ship search. Filled with information, "The Intei ship Bible" actually makes you exci about beginning your summer j search, because it highlights some credible opportunities that you p ably never knew existed. After thun ing through this book, you will ik have the compulsive urge to writ resume and begin your quest for ultimate internship. How could you not get excited a the possibility of hanging around set of the Letterman show, or teachi a group of inner city youth a course t you yourselfdesigned. How aboutwo ing with Disney, Lucasfilm, or J Henson Productions? Spend a sum at "Rolling Stone" or"The New Rep lic." Hobnob on Capitol Hill. Tra abroad. The experiences are endk and thanks to these new books, m easier to find than they were in the p The information contained in th books is presented in a well-organi and well-planned manner, compl with interesting and funny side b that not only make reading the te valuable, but enjoyable as well. you didn't know that MTV's Tabi Soren once spent a summer with Pc Jennings calling her the "girl with t boots.") Not only does "The Internship Bibi hunt down the internships for you, also is chock full of wholesome advi that could actually help you land t internship of your dreams. If you coveting something other than flipp burgers or sitting on a lifeguard st this summer, you should start y search now. And there's no better p to start than "The Bible." - Dean Bakopou II~ .. .:.; The one curfew you won't wanna miss. "1200 Curfews," the new live double album, is over two hours of your all-time Indigo Girls favorites, including seven never-before-released performances. It's filled with the best songs from their '92-'95 tours, moments backstage, classic cover tunes and early basement recordings. 43in rWqXjsponsi~zhty: the leadershlip imperative '1akyrnq Responsi6ifity: the leadershizp imperative '7akjny iRsponsziflity the leade~rshii mperative faking- TAKING RESPONSIBILITY: UF(LAnf(gWIet. -. *numne - -T Sunfay Octo6er 29, 1995 S10:30am-6:OOpm, in the§Aichigan 'Union Featuring the single "Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee." i VI a.* a" 7 v O v *-. . v a a Li Lu afiqhterfordemocratic reforms in China anda key student reader in the iananmen Square student rebelfion. KEYNOTE SPEAKER FEATURED SPEAKER ramie Washington speaking on: "Leadership in a (Diverse World" . I i